
She was cold, drenched, and barely holding on.
An elderly brown bat, now named Bea Arthur, was found clutching a metal fence in Gilbertsville, Pennsylvania — soaking wet and completely exposed after a storm.
The poor girl had been stranded there for three long days, shivering and vulnerable to predators.
But just in time, help arrived.
“The poor old girl was hanging on a metal fence in Gilbertsville, Pennsylvania, for three days,” said Stephanie Stronsick, founder of Pennsylvania Bat Rescue.
“She was found by the homeowner, who messaged us on Facebook after finding her hanging out in the open, exposed to predators and soaking wet from the previous night’s storm.”

Wearing gloves and armed with compassion, a rescuer gently freed Bea from the fence and brought her straight to the sanctuary’s rehab center. That’s when things started to turn around.
Once safe and dry, Bea began to show her sweet, shy personality. Staff noticed that she was suffering from swelling in her head — likely from hitting something during the storm — which caused some temporary neurological symptoms.
She was given meds and lots of rest, and day by day, the tiny fighter began to heal.
“She’s quite shy but very sweet,” Stronsick said.

Bea is a brown bat, a vital species in North America that helps keep insect populations in check and even pollinates some plants. Though often misunderstood, bats like Bea are essential to our ecosystems — and more gentle than people realize.
They’re also incredibly social, curious, and intelligent animals — and most species thrive when they have companions to interact with.
The team at the rescue gave Bea exactly what she needed: time. She spent the winter recovering in a warm, safe space, and when spring arrived, they reassessed her condition to see if she could return to the wild. But unlike older bats they had cared for before, Bea wasn’t able to go back.
“She was our first senior bat who didn’t return to the wild,” the rescue shared.
In the past, most elderly bats in their care were still strong enough to survive on their own. But Bea’s age and the trauma she endured left her unable to hunt and eat the large amounts of insects needed to thrive. Instead, she was officially retired to the sanctuary, where she spent her days with other non-releasable bat friends — curled up in her favorite hammock, just the way she liked it.

And at last, Stephanie has a message for anyone who spots a bat in trouble: “Contact a licensed wildlife rehabilitator — don’t try to handle it on your own. That one call could save a life.
Because every creature, no matter how small, deserves safety, warmth… and someone to show up when it matters most.
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